Saturday, August 2, 2014

Seventeen years in the making 49ers new football stadium debuts with a soccer match/traffic mess

SANTA CLARA – I never thought I’d envision this place, this
moment, this day.

On June 5, 1997, I was covering an election event in the
Longshoreman’s Hall off the Embarcadero near Fisherman’s Wharf that ended with
then San Francisco Mayor Willie Brown standing atop a table swigging champagne
and proclaiming the greatest victory ever by the San Francisco 49ers.

Or at least one that did not involve a Joe Montana or Steve
Young touchdown pass.

San Francisco voters had narrowly passed Measures D and F– by the margin of a whisker on Willie
Brown’s mustache --that at the time
paved the way for the 49ers to build a brand spanking new $325 stadiumcomplex – including a $200 million, 1.5
million square foot Eddie DeBartolo stamped shopping mall – that would open in
Candlestick Point next to Candlestick Park in the year 2000.

“There’s an old Chinese proverb,” 49ers president Carmen
Policy said that night, “one ugly victory is better than 1,000 glorious
defeats.”

Well, 1,000 defeats seem to follow. The 49ers evolved from
the Bill Walsh/George Seifert Dynasty Years to the Dennis Erickson/Mike Nolan
Errors. While the 49ers built a bridge of quarterbacks – from Tim Rattay to Ken
Dorsey to the unforgettable Cody Pickett – to arrive to Alex Smith and Colin
Kaepernick, the new stadium was struck in a proverbial Alcatraz.

Now, 17 years later and 14 years after a new 49ers stadium
was first to be built in San Francisco, I sit in the front row of the plush
press box on the eighth/penthouse top floor of a new 49ers stadium on August 2, 2014.

In Santa Clara, not San Francisco. Beside an amusement park,
not a shopping mall. Watching a futbol match, not a football game.

Except for traffic, it is not ugly. Levi Stadium is, well, a
stroke of jean-ius. Hallelujah! It's not a 10. It's a button-down 501 masterpiece!

The honor of playing this inaugural night in the new stadium
was given to the MLS’ San Jose Earthquakes and Seattle Sounders and 40, 000
plus fans/crash dummies who were so many mice in an experiment leading to the
ultimate discovery – trying to figure out how to soon get an additional 30,000
people into Levi’s Stadium for a 49ers game. That’s right, USA World Cup star
Clint Dempsey was simply a guinea pig here.

From the press box perspective, the first thing that needs
addressing is you can’t fit a foot-long hot dog (excuse me, it's listed as frankfurter in Levi's Stadium) into a six-inch roll, no matter
if it’s home baked. And the giant big mega video screens at both ends of the stadium are
easier to see and hear than the TV sets directly above the front row. Either
move them or hire a chiropractor for halftime and post-game.

And, catering to the media’s image as fat slobs, there are
more desert items in the press box than 49ers on the police blotter. I should also note that there may be more restrooms in the press box than the entire Candlestick Park.

Other than that, the press box at Levi’s Stadium is a
significant upgrade over the press box at Candlestick Park if only for the fact
that it doesn’t leak, though it does have a new stadium smell that resembles
fresh kettle corn.

As for the stadium itself, I didn't have a chance to walk
around and check it out because there aren’t enough bread crumbs on earth to
allow me to retrace my steps to the press box. The last time I was at this site, which rests up against the 49ers training facility at 4949 Centennial Way, it was a huge vacant parking lot where CHP trained its motorcyclists.
Now it’s a concrete jungle out there
and, as of right now as far as I know, there is only one elevator in operation
to take selected fans/media/VIPs to one of eight floors.

All in all, Levi’s Stadium is going to take some getting
used to. Like this trivia question: Who was the first player to score in the
49ers new stadium? Answer: Midfielder Yannick Djalo from Lisbon, Portugal.

Traffic for the inaugural soccer game was a nightmare, the
worst I have been involved in since after Game 3 of the 1989 World Series and
the Loma Prieta Earthquake. The media lot was supposedly filled a half hour
prior to kickoff and we were blocked and misdirected and nobody with a uniform
knew where to put us. They were like umpires waving us foul. I ended parking on a residential street almost a mile
away.

Nevertheless, the Quakes/Sounders soccer match drew a curious crowd of
48,765 to the dry run for football in the 49ers new stadium.